Tantalum Bead Capacitors

Tantalum bead capacitors are polarised and have low voltage ratings like electrolytic capacitors. They are expensive but very small, so they are used where a large capacitance is needed in a small size.

Modern tantalum bead capacitors are printed with their capacitance, voltage and polarity in full. However older ones use a colour-code system which has two stripes (for the two digits) and a spot of colour for the number of zeros to give the value in µF. The standard colour code is used, but for the spot, grey is used to mean × 0.01 and white means × 0.1 so that values of less than 10µF can be shown. A third colour stripe near the leads shows the voltage (yellow 6.3V, black 10V, green 16V, blue 20V, grey 25V, white 30V, pink 35V). The positive (+) lead is to the right when the spot is facing you: 'when the spot is in sight, the positive is to the right'. 

  • For example:   blue, grey, black spot   means 68µF
  • For example:   blue, grey, white spot   means 6.8µF
  • For example:   blue, grey, grey spot   means 0.68µF

Tantalum capacitor price set to rise

Tantalum capacitor could cost more as raw material prices react to the closure of Australian mines.

"The suspension of tantalum production at the Wodgina mine means that the industry is entering uncertain times for tantalum," said Edmund Coady, sales director of component distributor Charcroft Electronics. "Capacitor manufacturers can renew their contracts with the tantalum powder manufacturers and accept a significant price increase in return for a reliable and continuous source of supply, or they can play a waiting game."

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